2020 U-M Kellogg Eye Center Annual Report

Page 12

Accelerating Our Virtual Care Programs Kellogg’s long-standing commitment to expanding access to eye care through e-health proved prescient during the COVID-19 pandemic. To balance the needs of patient care while minimizing potential exposure to the virus, new treatment models and protocols needed to be implemented quickly, says Jennifer Weizer, M.D., ophthalmology professor and Kellogg Safety Committee Chair.

While some patient care may be provided virtually, Kellogg

researchers have found that some critical data, (e.g., images

Kathleen Moss, COA, assists a patient at a Virtual Plus visit.

of the retina or assessments of the cornea) must be collected in-person. Therefore, our virtual care team came up with new ways to collect the patient data they needed while minimizing

Virtual Plus

contact between patients and care providers.

As COVID-19 took hold, it became clear that some patients Drive-up Services

in need of more extensive testing still feared coming into the

“During the initial stages of COVID-19, we began with drive-up

clinics, says Shahzad Mian, M.D., Vice Chair for Clinical

intraocular eye pressure (IOP) checks at the Kellogg Eye Center

Sciences and Learning at Kellogg. “We quickly realized the need to have more options for ophthalmology patients with severe

for patients with such conditions as glaucoma, which require

conditions. For these patients, we implemented

ongoing monitoring and management,” Dr. Weizer

the Virtual Plus program,” he says.

says. A follow-up eHealth visit, or virtual visit, discuss the patient’s condition.

“We continue to provide this

drive-up service for at-risk patients or those who don’t feel comfortable coming into the center or our community office locations,” she says. When the patient drives up to the clinic site, a technician suited up in personal protective equipment uses a handheld instru-

The program enables a patient in need of ancillary testing or treatment

THIS IS A VERY EFFICIENT AND

FOCUSED WAY FOR US TO TEST PATIENTS IN AS SAFE A WAY AS POSSIBLE. — Jennifer Weizer, M.D.

ment to measure the patient’s IOP.

“This is a very efficient and

focused way for us to test patients in as

betes to quickly and directly get needed services, eliminating waiting periods and the need to move from one room to another. After testing is complete, the patient schedules a virtual visit with a physician to discuss the results. “With Virtual Plus, patients can see us individually without

Mian. “We want to provide care at a level equivalent

safety aspects of a quick check.”

to pre-COVID-19, without patients having safety concerns.

Mia Woodward, M.D., M.S., co-director and Rebecca Wu,

M.D., operational director of the program, found that patients

services as we expand in all locations,” he says. In addition

greatly appreciate the new system. Dr. Woodward noted that

to the main Wall St. facility, Virtual Plus is currently available

“patients felt that fewer person-to-person interactions made for

at the Canton, Northville and Huron River Drive locations.

a safer appointment.”

10

macular degeneration and dia-

important from a safety perspective,” says Dr.

“We found that patients like the convenience and A large quality assessment analysis of the project led by

for conditions such as glaucoma,

crowding the waiting room, which is

safe a way as possible,” Dr. Weizer says.

was then scheduled with the doctor to

“Our goal is to provide our community with quality


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Articles inside

The Chair’s Perspective

1min
page 3

Cloud-based AI Detection of Diabetic Retinopathy

1min
page 34

Company Funding

1min
page 33

Saving Children’s Sight in Ethiopia

2min
page 32

Restoring Sight in Photoreceptor Degeneration

1min
page 31

Legacy Bequests

4min
pages 30-31

Endowment to Support International Program

1min
page 29

Advancing Research Safely

2min
page 28

Personalized Care for Corneal Ulcers

1min
page 27

Alumni Highlights

2min
pages 26-27

Breakthroughs in Diabetic Retinopathy

1min
page 26

JDRF Center of Excellence

2min
page 25

Conducting Clinical Trials During a Pandemic

1min
page 24

Novel Research Methods

1min
page 23

Tissue Banking to Treat Corneal Disease

1min
page 22

Training Tomorrow’s Leaders Virtually

2min
page 21

Patient Safety Drives Clinical Operations

3min
page 20

Medication Adherence in Glaucoma Patients

1min
page 19

Danger in Delaying Treatment

1min
page 19

Providing Care in Communities

1min
page 18

Joanne Angle Public Health Award

1min
page 17

Increasing Access to Care

3min
pages 16-17

Ecosystem for Greater Diversity

2min
page 15

Nanoparticle Therapy in Cancer

1min
page 14

Ophthalmology Bootcamp

1min
page 14

Photoreceptor Survival

1min
page 13

Stem Cells and the Retina

1min
page 13

Accelerating Virtual Care

1min
page 12

Kellogg International Initiatives

3min
pages 10-11

Innovative Congenital Ocular Disease Clinic

1min
page 9

Linking Vision Impairment & Cognition

1min
page 8

Artificial Intelligence to Improve Surgical Skills

1min
page 7

Promising Tool to Measure Patient Outcomes

1min
page 6

Molecular Regulation of Photoreceptor Cell Death

1min
page 5

New Multidisciplinary Facial Nerve Clinic

1min
pages 4-5
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